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Kurashiki Travel Guide powered by advice from Real Travelers

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Introduction

by Frommers Travel Guides

    26km (16 miles) W of Okayama

    If I were to select the most picturesque town in Japan, Kurashiki would certainly be a top contender. Here, in the heart of the city, clustered around a willow-fringed canal, is a delightful historic district of old buildings and ryokan perfect for camera buffs.

    As an administrative center of the shogunate in the 17th century, Kurashiki blossomed into a prosperous market town where rice, sake, and cotton were collected from the surrounding region and shipped off to Osaka and beyond. Back in those days, wealth was measured in rice; large granaries were built to store the mountains of granules passing through the town, and canals were dug so that barges laden with grain could work their way to ships anchored in the Seto Inland Sea. Kurashiki, in fact, means "Warehouse Village."

    It's these warehouses, still standing, that give Kurashiki its distinctive charm. Kurashiki is also known throughout Japan for its art museums, including the prestigious Ohara Museum of Art with its collection of European and Japanese art. For these reasons, Kurashiki is hardly undiscovered, and Japanese flock here in droves, especially in summer months. Yet despite its overcrowdedness, Kurashiki still rates high on my list of places to see in Japan.

Kurashiki Travel Experiences

Traveler Photos of Kurashiki

It's probably illegal to take pictures of children, but he was cute in his uniform! Me getting up the courage to ask someone to take my picture...after I had already taken theirs The streetcar ride from the Hiromshima station to my hostel Picture for a Mr. Mike Kite; it's no dancing green elf, but it is an irish bar in Japan.
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